Use the slide master
feature or a provided template to create consistency in your design. The method
of content presentation (list, image, text) depends on the content, but
consistency with other elements such as font, colors, background, throughout
the presentation is essential. Establish consistent contrasting colors
(dark/light) for text and background.
Choose your font and
size carefully. Use sans serif fonts (such as Arial Rounded MT Bold) and 32
point font size for text. Anything smaller is difficult to read. Avoid all
caps. Use color to highlight. Limit punctuation. Follow the 6x6 rule: No more
than 6 lines of text per slide and no more than 6 words in each line of text.
Images should reinforce
and complement your message. They should be impactful, not space-fillers. Empty
space on the slide will actually enhance readability. Don’t clutter the slide
with images unless they add value. Also, test your images to make sure they
retain quality when projected on a larger screen. Clip art generally lacks
emphasis.
These features seem
impressive at first, but they tend to distract from your message and get old
quickly. Transitions, text fly-ins, animations and sounds may reduce the
professionalism you desire to portray. Special effect are similar to graphics,
they should impact the presentation not detract from the presentation.
Limit the number of
slides according to the time you have available for the presentation. Flipping
to the next slide constantly and rushing through the presentation not only
distracts the audience, but typically does not get your message across. A good
rule of thumb is one slide per minute.
PowerPoint allows the
presenter to move forward and backwards without paging through interim slides.
Practice moving forward and backward within your presentation. Your audience
may want to see a previous slide or you may want to skip ahead to something of
immediate relevance. Know these shortcuts:
N, ENTER, PAGE DOWN, RIGHT
ARROW, DOWN ARROW, or the SPACEBAR (or click
the mouse)
|
Advance to the next slide
|
P, PAGE UP, LEFT ARROW, UP
ARROW, orBACKSPACE
|
Return to the previous slide
|
<number>+ENTER
|
Go to slide <number>
|
B or PERIOD
|
Display a black screen, or return to the slide
show from a black screen
|
W or COMMA
|
Display a white screen, or return to the slide
show from a white screen
|
S or PLUS SIGN
|
Stop or restart an automatic slide show
|
ESC, CTRL+BREAK, or HYPHEN
|
End a slide show
|
7. Do not read from your slides or
speak to them.
Don’t face the screen and read
your slides. The bulleted information on your slides should be supplementary to
what you are saying. Use the slides to trigger your comments or to pace
yourself, but do not read them. The audience can read. Remember that your
slides are only there to support, not to replace your talk! You’ll want to tell
a story, describe your data or explain circumstances, and only provide keywords
through your slides. If you read your slides, the audience will get bored, stop
listening and not get your message.
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